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1160 points jbredeche | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.225s | source
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vessenes ◴[] No.43998661[source]
NYT isn’t super specific here, but they made it sound like the disease treated is liver related. My understanding is that the liver is a good place to start with CRISPR-type gene treatments, in that the liver normally deals with anomalous shit in your bloodstream, say, like CRISPR type edits. So anywhere outside the liver is going to be significantly harder to get really broad uptake of gene edits.

It’s crazy encouraging that this worked out for this kid, and I’m somewhat shocked this treatment was approved in the US - I don’t think of us as very aggressive in areas like this. But to me, really hopeful and interesting.

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scotty79 ◴[] No.43998742[source]
I don't think it's gonna be that hard. All cells that blood reaches were happily taking mRNA vaccine.
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XorNot ◴[] No.43999719[source]
No they were not. A vaccine triggers an immune response, not a functional change.

mRNA vaccines are highly localized: you get a sore arm because most of it only gets taken up by muscle cells around the injection site, which spend some time producing the antigen and triggering a primary immune response (the inflammation aka the sore arm).

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1. xrhobo ◴[] No.44006415[source]
What I find interesting about the covid mRNA vaccine is I remember being sick in March 2020 and I can't remember being sick since.

I can remember getting a sniffle at night and waking up fine the next morning a few times.

I think I had two doses of covid mRNA vaccine.

I have actually forgot what it is like to be sick. It almost feels like the covid vaccine gave me some kind of super immunity. I never get the flu shot either. I have not had the flu in 5 years for sure.